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arXiv:1407.8396 [astro-ph.GA]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Effects of stellar evolution and ionizing radiation on the environments of massive stars

Jonathan Mackey, Norbert Langer, Shazrene Mohamed, Vasilii V. Gvaramadze, Hilding R. Neilson, Dominique M. -A. Meyer

Published 2014-07-31Version 1

We discuss two important effects for the astrospheres of runaway stars: the propagation of ionizing photons far beyond the astropause, and the rapid evolution of massive stars (and their winds) near the end of their lives. Hot stars emit ionizing photons with associated photoheating that has a significant dynamical effect on their surroundings. 3D simulations show that HII regions around runaway O stars drive expanding conical shells and leave underdense wakes in the medium they pass through. For late O stars this feedback to the interstellar medium is more important than that from stellar winds. Late in life, O stars evolve to cool red supergiants more rapidly than their environment can react, producing transient circumstellar structures such as double bow shocks. This provides an explanation for the bow shock and linear bar-shaped structure observed around Betelgeuse.

Comments: 5 pages, 2 figures, conference proceedings in "Wind Bubbles, Astrospheres and the Heliosphere: Environments and Cosmic Rays", Bochum, Germany (Nov 2013). Published in ASTRA proceedings, an Open Access Journal for Refereed Proceedings in Extraterrestrial Research
Categories: astro-ph.GA, astro-ph.SR
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